sbohner wrote:
I took my Liberty CRD into Duncan Jeep in Blacksburg, VA today for the recall. I only have 1500 miles on it so far and noticed that it had been rough when shifting at 50-60 miles per hour. I requested the following TSB's be done.
18-008-06 & 18-009-06 -- FLASH UPGRADE TO IMPROVE SHIFT POINTS
21-007-06 -- TRANSMISSION FILTERS
When I picked it up, the service fellow said that they drove it and found that the roughness at 50-60 miles per hour was normal for this vehicle (they all do it)

. When stated that way, it sounds like a design defect that is not going to be attended to. I inquired further indicating that if there was a filter issue with the transmission manufactured the date that mine was, wouldn't it be better to prevent the failure than wait for it. He said he can only do the TSB if the failure code shows in the diagnostic

.
I had taken the unit in earlier because the shifter for 2-wheel, Part-time, and 4-wheel drive was unusually difficult to get into gear. The mechanic struggled with it and announced that they are all like this -- perhaps there is a pattern here

.
While really like my CRD, I'm disappointed with DC's position on the TSB's. I'm more concerned with the long-term implications of running a vehicle that is destine to have a costly problem because the wrong filters on the transmission were fitted. This seems to come under the Uniform Commercial Code (UCC) section 2 for sale of products and particularly where known defects are cited. Has anyone explored this path with getting some remedy with DC?
Cheers,
Shawn
You really need to call as many dealers ahead of time as possible to see if any of them will even consider doing the reflash and/or filter TSB. You may not fall into the category (transmission build date) for the transmission filter TSB - which would be good because less people messing with your Jeep.
You need to get a print out of the reflash TSB and show it to the service writer and show that it clearly states to "perform the TSB when vehicle is in for service." The catch here is that it must be in for some kind of service. That could be them taking it for a test drive for the mysterious shudder and then, by the way, please perform the reflash (you only need 18-008-06 as yours is an '06 model).
At least Chrysler has this information available. My 2004 Toyota Sienna transmission shifts like crap, they all do(2004 thru current 2006), and there is no information or attempted fix available.
Even worse, my 2004 Honda Element (traded in for this) had the entire front end crack open and leak power steering fluid and transmission fluid at only 500 miles. So bad things happen to all model vehicles - but the foreign car makers are VERY good at keeping failure information private.